Alec Baldwin (Trump) and Kate McKinnon (Clinton) were convincing as their political doppelgangers, mastering every vocal inflection, facial expression, and behavioral tick—down to Trump’s pursed lips and Clinton’s shimmy.

If you watched the real first debate, the laughter may come less comfortably, because the sketch is remarkably true to life. The debate was so bizarre, little embellishment is needed to turn it into a comedy routine.

The sketch pokes fun at Clinton’s well-rehearsed witticisms, like “Trumped Up Trickle Down Economics,” and her stiff attempts at relatability while highlighting Trump’s childish antics, including his accusations that his microphone was broken.

“I told him in private. It was just me and Sean, late at night,” Baldwin says. “I leaned over and I whispered in his ear, ‘Sean, I’m against the war in Iraq.’ And then he whispered in my ear, ‘I’m against the war, too.’ And then the next thing I knew, I was kissing Sean Hannity.”

“We should be talking about the important issues,” Baldwin says, “like Rosie O’Donnell and how she’s a fat loser and everyone agrees with me and I just wanted to bring that up in a presidential debate. Right at the end. My own volition. I did it.”

McKinnon’s performance is more deadpan, because her candidate is. But where Baldwin’s performance highlights Trump apparent disconnect with reality, even the jabs at Clinton reinforce her qualifications for the presidency.

“Listen America, I get it. You hate me. You hate my voice, and you hate my face,” McKinnon says in her closing remarks. “Well, here’s a tip. If you never want to see my face again, elect me president and I swear to God I will lock myself in the oval office and not come out for four years. But if you don’t elect me, I will continue to run for president until the day I die. And I will never die.”